The Sylvania Sandstone 1n Southwestern Ontario

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
G H. Reavely The University of Western Ontario Department of Geology
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
4
File Size:
2468 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1961

Abstract

The lower Middle Devonian Sylvania Sandstone occurs in the sub-surface in the western part of Mal-den township, Essex county, Ontario. The formation is composed of well rounded, frosted quartz grains with a silica content varying from 42 to 93 per cent and the grains are cemented by carbonate, constituting up to 57 per cent of the rock. This sand-stone is not a homogeneous bed but is divided by strata rich in carbon-ate cement. The thickness of the Sylvania in Malden township varies up to a known maximum thickness of 88 feet. The lower contact with the chert-bearing Bois Blanc formation is sharp but the upper contact with the Amherstburg formation (Detroit River group) exists as a transition by a gradual downward increase in quartz grains. The Sylvania would seem to outcrop in the lake bottom near the mouth of the Detroit River dipping to the north along a broad anticline the axis of which follows the Detroit River. Just south of Amherstburg, a local east-west trending
Citation

APA: G H. Reavely The University of Western Ontario Department of Geology  (1961)  The Sylvania Sandstone 1n Southwestern Ontario

MLA: G H. Reavely The University of Western Ontario Department of Geology The Sylvania Sandstone 1n Southwestern Ontario. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1961.

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